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Magic for Marigold

Magic for Marigold

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: beautiful world of a child's imagination
Review: As a baby Marigold's life was saved by a lovely lady doctor who then married into the Lesley clan and became her Aunt Marigold. The little girl lives with her Mother, Young Grandmother and Old Grandmother as her father had died before she was born.

This is a fascinating book which is told from the point of view of a lonely little girl with a vivid imagination. She has an imaginary friend and shares her inmost thoughts with her. She also visits cousins and meets other children at school. As you read this book you learn all about the people who live on the beautiful Island with Marigold. You meet Old Grandmother, a fearsome old woman who has taken to her bed and the black cat sitting on the gate-post who is called the Witch of Endor. There are numerous aunts and uncles and cousins. Marigold grows older and learns about life. Her Grandmother learns lessons as well. (After Old Grandmother dies, Young Grandmother becomes just Grandmother).

The book was first published in 1935 so it tells of a long-lost very different world. I have a 1937 copy which belonged to my mother and it is one of my most treasured possessions.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Magic for Marigold
Review: I love this book! Montgomery eliquent use of prose,her vividimagination and poetry allow the reader to see life throughMontgomery's eyes. Montgomery's talent as a writer enable girls young and old to view life in its wonderful aspects as she does in Magic for Marigold. Marigold is a delightful girl with wonderful dreams and high adventure. My personal favorite is her journey with the uncontrollable princess and her midnight rendevous with Budge. I recommend this not only to girls young and old but to mothers to read to their childeren. Everyone should read L.M. Montgomery's books. I guarentee joy and happiness with each page.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Disappointing after Anne
Review: Looking forward to reading some of Montgomery's other works, I spent several days laboring over Magic for Marigold. The book is well written, sometimes enjoyable and entertaining, often slow and boring. Marigold is no Anne. She isn't Rilla, either. She has no spunk, no fire-- and that is what I always loved about Anne and all of the women in the Green Gables series.
That is not to say that Marigold doesn't get into Anne-like scrapes. She just doesn't get out of them in Anne-like ways.

The Princess Varvara incident is a great example. Marigold is lead-practically dragged- into mischief by a mysterious girl who insists that she is a princess. Not only is Marigold unable to be bad on her own, but she can't be good on her own either. She lacks decisiveness and a will. Perhaps that comes from being raised in a household with an over-domineering great-grandmother, a domineering grandmother and a push over mother.
A true L. M. Montgomery fan will have to read this book to experience another side of Montgomery, just don't have your heart set on meeting an engaging, enchanting girl. The most enchanting thing about Marigold is her name.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A magic book for young readers
Review: Noone knew what to name the baby. Her father was dead and anyway he didnt have a name that could have a girl version. One day the baby gets sick. All the men doctors say there is no hope. They resort to the woman doctor. She saves the babys life. Her name is Marigold(which is what her mom wanted to name her anyway). So then Marigold grows into childhood. She has many adventures. This is a story everyone would like (except mabe males).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The exotic adventures of a little girl named Marigold
Review: The opening of "Magic for Marigold" is probably my second favorite of all of L. M. Montgomery's novels, after "Anne of Green Gables" of course. The story of how Marigold Lesley came by her name and was sealed of the tribe is wonderful, and the way Old Grandmother rules over the Lesley clan is the best thing in the book. Although the final scene between Marigold and Old Grandmother is equally wonderful, the novel seems to lose some spark once Young Grandmother is no longer "Young" Grandmother. Marigold's encounter with the young woman claiming to be Princess Varvana is another one of Montgomery's comic vignettes, which plays to her chief charm as a writer, spinning comic yarns about provincial life on Prince Edward Island at the beginning of the century (this novel was first published in 1929). I do not think the rest of the novel holds up as well as the highpoints, but when she is good, Montgomery is very good and this book remains my favorite one of her novels outside of the Anne and Emily series. Final Note: Having just returned from vacation on Prince Edward Island, I have to say that the house shown on the cover sure looks like the Green Gables Museum at Silver Bush to me.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: FAVORITE AUTHOR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!********
Review: This book was given to me by my parents for Christmas and when I saw who wrote it I knew I was in for a good book. Magic For Marigold is one of those books which can warm your heart with laughter because of childish mistakes, and make you angry because of how the other characters are treated. I recommend this book to anyone who has an imagination and would be able to imagine what goes on in a child's mind.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: it will last for life
Review: This delightful novel focuses on Marigold's growth from childhood to adolescense. She is a very likable and human character. The character portrayal is very good. The contrast between Marigold and Old Grandmother is interesting. Marigold triumphs, tragedies, fears, successes are on the surface commonplace but they are the stuff of life, this book is a treasure, a joy to read. (Interesting is Marigold's favorite word, I like rereading this book and seeing the world through her eyes.) The only disappointment in this book is Marigold's mother, Lorraine, who never deveops a back bone. Marigold is spunky enough, she always rises to the occasion as when she entertaing unexpected guests when her mother and grandmother were unexpectedly called away. The characterization of women (i.e. a woman doctor stops working just because she is married) is dated but need not interfere with one's enjoyment of this story.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not one of her better books
Review: Unless you're an avid fan of L.M. Montgomery, you may want to give this one a miss. This particular story focuses on the growth of a little girl named Marigold, from her birth and the debate over her name (one of the better sections of the book), to her early adolescence. Several of the chapters were originally written as short stories meant to stand on their own, and they're definitely the best of the book. (The chapter with the Princess Varvara is a case in point.) Some of the other chapters are weak -- dare I say boring? -- and the ending falls so flat it's disappointing. In short, the book lacks the author's typical spark. She's better represented in her other books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A magic book for young readers
Review: When I was 8 years old, I found this book in the public library and read it over and over. Even years later, I always remembered the book, although I didn't realize that the author was the same one who wrote Anne of Green Gables. Somehow, Marigold struck a chord with me, and the magic seemed real. I imagined her home in the clouds as a fanciful heavenly place. It was my absolutely favorite book of all time, and I would recommend it for any young sensitive, imaginative, girl.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not one of her better books
Review: Witty, funny, with a tang of bittersweet harmony woven within its pages, this story captures the essence of childhood struggling to grasp the joys and sorrows of adolescence. From the very beginning, Marigold works her magic on the entire clan. Take a walk with her and Old Grandmother in the moonlit garden one evening and discover the unspoken connection between this unlikely pair. Relive your childhood as she finds herself in more trouble than she can count. As you read the pages, you'll remember your first love letter, your first friend,and your first disappointment. Laugh with her as she shares a good joke with Uncle Horace. But be prepared. Marigold has her quiet, reflective moments too, especially with Aunt Marigold. Like all children, she too must learn the hardest lesson of all: letting go. Discover how she learns that the greatest magic comes from within herself.


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